review first large change in corrections was from private to public ◦first “principalities” in...

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Review Review First large change in corrections was from private to public First “principalities” in 12 th Century Shift from private to territorial lords By 1500, government “corrections” overcomes traditions of private restitution and/or revenge Punishments very public, and brutal/bizarre In part, an effort to demonstrate that the government has a monopoly on the “legitimate” use of violence

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Page 1: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

ReviewReview

First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12th Century

Shift from private to territorial lords◦By 1500, government “corrections” overcomes

traditions of private restitution and/or revenge Punishments very public, and brutal/bizarre In part, an effort to demonstrate that the

government has a monopoly on the “legitimate” use of violence

Page 2: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Review IIReview II

Eventually, corrections changes into the form we recognize today

No more molten lead down the front of the shirt, but still corporal punishment

Punishment becomes less “public” Why?? Spierenburg’s explanation?

Transformation of sensibilities (Enlightenment) State no longer needs to prove itself

Page 3: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Review III (Stuff I forgot)Review III (Stuff I forgot)

Between Medieval and Colonial AmericaEngland

◦Corporal, Capital◦Transportation◦Pre-Prisons

Prison Hulks Debtor’s Prisons Houses of Corrections

◦ John Howard as first major “prison reformer”

Page 4: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Colonial AmericaColonial America(1600-1750)(1600-1750)

Nature of Society◦Calvinist doctrine

Crime not a “problem” (fact of life) Control through family training/community cohesion

Nature of Punishment◦Borrow heavily from England, So...central

features are same: Corporal Public Sparse use of prisons

Page 5: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Enlightenment and ChangeEnlightenment and Change (1770s-1820) (1770s-1820)

Population boom and shift from agrarian to industrial economy

EnlightenmentProduces alarm/dismay but also optimism

◦First “burst of enthusiasm” (deterrence) Reform the legal code Substitute prisons for corporal punishment

◦First wave of prison building (1790-1800)◦“A repulsion from the gallows rather than any faith

in the penitentiary spurred the late-18th Century construction”

Page 6: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

The Second Major Shift in The Second Major Shift in CorrectionsCorrections

Prison displaces corporal/capital punishment as the primary form of corrections ◦Stump the Chump

Philadelphia Reformers (Philadelphia Society for the Alleviating the Miseries of Prisons)◦Dr. Benjamin Rush ◦Ben Franklin

Page 7: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

From deterrence to penance From deterrence to penance (1820-1850) (1820-1850)

By 1820, the luster of the classical school (and associated reforms) fades◦No crime reduction, trouble with prisons◦Still, very optimistic (“impulse to reform”)

The Invention of the Penitentiary ◦A “PROPER” penitentiary will reform offenders

PN vs. Auburn debate◦Reflects new understanding of cause of crime

Page 8: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Eastern Penitentiary (1829-1970)Eastern Penitentiary (1829-1970)

Pennsylvania Model = reform through penance, solitude, silence, labor

Page 9: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

The Great DebateThe Great Debate

Pennsylvania Separate AND Silent model gets competition

Auburn (New York)◦Auburn Prison opens in 1818, adopts Walnut St. Jail

(to become PN model) ideas in 1821 Not a good architectural fit, other problems…

◦Reform through discipline/obedience, labor (inmates congregate to work, but lockstep, etc) Contract labor system

Not much of a “Debate,” but Auburn Model wins out…..WHY?

Page 10: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Southern/Western PenologySouthern/Western Penology

Often neglected topic in corrections textsCorrections less centralized

◦Justice dispensed at county level (not state)Prisons develop differently

◦In South, race and the “Black codes”◦Economic differences

Little $ to build prisons (civil war decimation) Different economy

◦The “LEASE SYSTEM”◦Penal Farms

Page 11: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

The New Penology The New Penology (1870-1900)(1870-1900)

By 1860, enthusiasm for penitentiaries wanes ◦Corruption, corporal punishment, crowding...

Wardens give up on ideal and seek to maintain order1870 National Prison Congress

◦Leads to “Declaration of Principles” Reaffirm reform over punishment Indeterminate sentences Parole Separate institutions for females and juveniles

◦The lockstep, rules of silence, isolation, etc = humiliating and unproductive

◦Elmira as “test case” for new “Reformatory”

Page 12: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Progressive EraProgressive Era1900-19601900-1960

Progressives = middle/upper class reformers◦Great optimism + belief in government◦Sought to eradicate all sorts of social ills◦Crime?

General reform (poverty reduction, fix slums) Embrace new penology

◦ Indeterminate sentences + parole boards/supervision◦ Juvenile Justice System◦Probation

Page 13: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

The Medical Model and The Medical Model and “Rehabilitative Ideal” “Rehabilitative Ideal”

By 1940s, social sciences gain prestige◦Psychiatry, psychology, sociology

Rehabilitative Ideal (1940s-1960s) Causes of crime are unique (social, psychological) The goal of corrections is to identify and

eliminate/correct these causes (rehabilitation) Treatment must be individualized

◦Corrections workers and judges must be trusted with a great deal of discretion

Page 14: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

1960s Corrections becomes 1960s Corrections becomes professionalizedprofessionalized

Rehab as unquestioned goal (in rhetoric at least) of Corrections system◦American Corrections Association (from

American Prison Association)◦Correctional Facilities

Standards for “correctional officers”All kinds of new Rx programs

◦College education, group counseling, therapeutic milieu, behavior modification

Page 15: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

ProgressivesProgressives Radicals, Radicals, Change...Change...(1960s-1980)(1960s-1980)

Social Context of 1960s◦Contrast with “progressive optimism/faith”◦Many progressives turn more radical

Labeling theory ascends avoid “doing harm” Martinson Report “nothing works”

◦Liberals embrace the “JUSTICE MODEL” ◦Conservatives have different take on ’60s

Crime = symbol of all the “DISORDER” Solution = go back to classical school

Page 16: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

Uneasy AllianceUneasy Alliance

Conservatives and liberals agree on:◦The need to limit sentencing discretion

Conservatives = liberal judges Liberals = corrupt, racist judges/parole boards Solution = return to determinate sentencing,

sentencing guidelines, etc◦Only difference is on length of sentences

Liberals = do less harm, be fair (justice model) Conservatives = punishment WORKS!

Page 17: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

The Crime Control EraThe Crime Control Era

1975-2000◦Prison as Crime Prevention

Sentencing Guidelines/Policy◦Punishment Programs◦Political Rhetoric

Page 18: Review First large change in corrections was from private to public ◦First “principalities” in 12 th Century  Shift from private to territorial lords

What Era Now? What Era Now?

Liberals◦Rehabilitation◦Restorative Justice

Conservatives?◦Problem Oriented Policing◦Zeal for prison has waned